Unions: Obamacare Will ‘Destroy The Very Health and Wellbeing’ of Workers

"The Affordable Care Act has a new, high profile set of dissenters: Unions. The leaders of three major U.S. unions, including the highly influential Teamsters, have sent a scathing letter to Democratic leaders in Congress, warning that unless changes are made, President Obama’s health care reform plan will 'destroy the foundation of the 40 hour work week that is the backbone of the American middle class.' If that’s not bad enough, the Affordable Care Act, if not modified, will 'destroy the very health and wellbeing of our members along with millions of other hardworking Americans,' the letter says." Continue reading

Continue ReadingUnions: Obamacare Will ‘Destroy The Very Health and Wellbeing’ of Workers

Committing War Crimes is a Duty; Reporting Them is a Felony

"Prior to his trial, Manning was held for nine months in an especially severe form of solitary confinement that involved forced nudity, sleep deprivation, and persistent abuse. His treatment, which constituted torture, won him a reduction off 112 days from the prison sentence he will receive for the supposed offense of exposing officially sanctioned crimes. If Manning had been a war criminal, rather than an honorable soldier who exposed war crimes, his pre-trial confinement would have led to dismissal of the charges against him – or his sentence being overturned." Continue reading

Continue ReadingCommitting War Crimes is a Duty; Reporting Them is a Felony

Little restraint in military giveaways to police

"An Associated Press investigation of the Defense Department program, originally aimed at helping local law enforcement fight terrorism and drug trafficking, found that a disproportionate share of the $4.2 billion worth of property distributed since 1990 has been obtained by police departments and sheriff's offices in rural areas with few officers and little crime. The national giveaway program operates with scant oversight, and the surplus military gear often sits in storage, the AP found." Continue reading

Continue ReadingLittle restraint in military giveaways to police

After the whistle: Revealers of government secrets share how their lives have changed

"The former high-ranking National Security Agency analyst now sells iPhones. The top intelligence officer at the CIA lives in a motor home outside Yellowstone National Park and spends his days fly-fishing for trout. The FBI translator fled Washington for the West Coast. This is what life looks like for some after revealing government secrets. Blowing the whistle on wrongdoing, according to those who did it. Jeopardizing national security, according to the government. A look at the lives of a handful of those who did just that shows that they often wind up far from the stable government jobs they held. They can even wind up in the aisles of a craft store." Continue reading

Continue ReadingAfter the whistle: Revealers of government secrets share how their lives have changed

For Congress, ‘it’s classified’ is new equivalent of ‘none of your business’

"The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence reportedly gave its approval last week to an Obama administration plan to provide weapons to moderate rebels in Syria, but how individual members of the committee stood on the subject remains unknown. There was no public debate and no public vote when one of the most contentious topics in American foreign policy was decided. Members of both the Senate intelligence committee or its equivalent in the House were difficult to pin down on their view of providing arms to the rebels. The senators and representatives said they couldn’t give an opinion, or at least a detailed one, because the matter was classified." Continue reading

Continue ReadingFor Congress, ‘it’s classified’ is new equivalent of ‘none of your business’

The Blindness of Modern Economists

"The economic establishment blames today's evils on free markets, a lack of government intervention, and banks for being reluctant to lend. It blames government deficits on cheats who don't pay their taxes. There are four horsemen of the global economic apocalypse, all interlinked: the overburdened economy; broken banks; expensive interventionist governments; and a developing welfare and pension crisis. As a politician aptly described to me when I interviewed him a few months ago in Brussels, trying to squeeze out economic growth under these conditions is like trying to fly a plane with concrete wings." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThe Blindness of Modern Economists

The Pretense of Knowledge Is Alive & Well

"The Federal Reserve itself is a tool of the banks. It's a banking cartel. Trying to separate the banks from The Fed is an error. It's one big happy thieving family. Any (and all) government regulations that are put in place (or removed) are done for the benefit of the entire system. The best way to picture it is to think of a giant octopus. The head is The Federal Reserve and the sprawling arms are the banks. 'Regulations' and 'Deregulations' are just fodder for the masses out there to think that 'government is doing something'. To think that The Fed is some kind of 'regulator' is the same as thinking that the arsonist 'regulates' the fire." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThe Pretense of Knowledge Is Alive & Well

The Financial System Doesn’t Just Enable Theft, It Is Theft

"Needless to say, those with access to leveraged credit and the issuance of fiat money have the power to make claims on resources without actually having produced anything of value or earned tangible forms of wealth. Those with political power and wealth naturally have monopolies on the issuance of credit and paper money, as these enable the acquisition of real wealth without actually having to produce or earn the wealth. This system is intrinsically unstable, as the financial claims of credit and fiat money on limited real-world resources and wealth eventually exceed real-world resources, and the system of claims collapses in a heap." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThe Financial System Doesn’t Just Enable Theft, It Is Theft

Illinois Legislative Leaders Sue Governor Over Vetoing Lawmakers’ Pay Raise

"The Democratic heads of the Illinois House of Representatives and Senate on Tuesday filed a lawsuit challenging Governor Pat Quinn's veto of lawmakers' pay during a legislative impasse over pension reform. Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan and state Senate President John Cullerton said in a letter to fellow lawmakers that the purpose of the litigation 'is to protect the independence of the legislature and preserve the separation of powers.' 'It is our hope that the court will remedy this constitutional violation and that future governors will not feel empowered to use such coercive tactics,' the legislative leaders wrote." Continue reading

Continue ReadingIllinois Legislative Leaders Sue Governor Over Vetoing Lawmakers’ Pay Raise

Ride-sharing companies like Uber may lose ‘bandit cab’ stigma in California

"The draft rules to govern companies that already operate under such names as Lyft, SideCar and Uber, allowing passengers to electronically hail rides through smartphone applications, were unveiled by the state Public Utilities Commission (PUC). Among the proposed regulations are requirements for ride-share operators to obtain a license with the PUC to do business in California, to submit their drivers to criminal background checks and to carry liability insurance of at least $1 million per incident. Taxi drivers registered their disapproval by staging a noisy demonstration against the ride-sharing services on Tuesday, circling San Francisco City Hall in their cabs." Continue reading

Continue ReadingRide-sharing companies like Uber may lose ‘bandit cab’ stigma in California